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The Accessibility Gap in Language Learning Technology
1.2 billion people can't use your language learning app. Not because they don't want to learn. Because you built it for people who can see, hear, and click a mouse. That's 15% of the world's population  locked out of a market EdTech calls "accessible to all." Here's what "accessible" actually means in language learning: → Works great if you can see → Works great if you can hear → Works great if you can use a mouse → Doesn't work if you need screen readers, captions, high-co
June Antson
Oct 241 min read
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Clichés or Connections? How Language Learning Through AI Reinforces Cultural Stereotypes
When AI generates language learning content, it often reinforces stereotypes instead of sharing real culture. This pushes learners away, not closer. A 2025 study found participation dropped by 30% when minority students saw cultural bias in AI-powered language platforms. For example: UNESCO’s review of major language models found a lot of biased examples. Spanish lessons often default to tacos and mariachi. French content shows berets and baguettes. Chinese materials overuse
June Antson
Oct 221 min read
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The Divide Between Gamified Apps and Genuine Language Learning
500 lessons completed on your language app. But you still can't hold a basic conversation. Here's why app metrics ≠fluency What apps promise Master a language through convenient, structured lessons. Apps promise fluency through consistent practice. What users get Pattern recognition without conversational ability. You complete exercises but freeze when someone asks a question in real time. The fundamental mismatch: Controlled practice vs. spontaneous use Apps excel at discr
June Antson
Oct 212 min read
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Why AI Education Might Actually Save the Planet
Here’s the climate calculation that EdTech needs to make. The Problem When it comes to sustainability, education faces two major challenges: 1.The AI Cost Training AI models and running data centers consume significant energy, making each personalized interaction environmentally impactful. 2.Traditional’s Footprint Traditional education carries hidden environmental costs, including physical infrastructure, daily commutes, printed materials, and year-round building energy cons
June Antson
Oct 202 min read
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How technology helps me prepare lessons for multilingual classrooms
I teach English to students who speak 7 DIFFERENT heritage languages.Here 's how technology changed everything: The old way: Design separate materials for each language group (impossible) The new way: Tech that honours every linguistic background at once! My framework: → AI cognate mapping: Students discover "algebra" shares Arabic roots, "piano" comes from Italian. When they realize English borrowed from their heritage languages, their background becomes an asset, not a barr
June Antson
Oct 171 min read
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Technology that connects expats to their heritage culture
90% of expat families LOSE their heritage language by the third generation. The technology to change this already exists. Yet most parents don't know about it. The heritage language CRISIS is solvable. After looking at many EdTech platforms, I found three types that are changing how families prevent language loss: → Interactive storybook apps: Gus on the Go, Studycat, and Dinolingo now embed vocabulary learning within cultural narratives. No more boring translation drills tha
June Antson
Oct 161 min read
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Connecting with other families speaking our home-language: why it matters
Last Sunday, we spent the afternoon with three other Russian-speaking families in Vondelpark. The children played. The parents talked. Everyone spoke Russian naturally, without translation, without explanation. Anya didn't have to be the "Russian girl." She was just Anya. When Ivan and I moved to Amsterdam, we knew our daughter would grow up bilingual. What I didn't anticipate was how much we'd need community, not just for Anya, but for ourselves. For your child, other Russia
June Antson
Oct 151 min read
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Should I stop speaking English to my child because of my accent?
A parent asked me this yesterday. She's Russian, living in Amsterdam, worried her accented English will "confuse" or "limit" her daughter. This isn't a parenting question. It's a linguistics question. And the research is unambiguous. What the data shows: Children exposed to multiple accents develop superior phonological processing compared to children who hear only one accent. They're not confused, they're building cognitive flexibility. A 2019 study in Developmental Science
June Antson
Oct 142 min read
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When you worry your accent will affect your child's language learning
A parent asked me this week: "June, my English has an accent. Should I speak only Russian to my daughter?" I see this worry everywhere. Parents who grew up speaking one language, now raising children in another country, wondering if their "imperfect" English will somehow limit their child. Here's what 10 years of teaching languages across countries taught me: Your accent isn't a limitation. It's a gift. When Anya hears my Estonian-accented English, my husband Ivan's Russian-a
June Antson
Oct 141 min read
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From Reader to Writer in 30 Minutes: Yesterday's Author Session at Pushkin School in Leiden
Yesterday, I spent the afternoon with a room full of curious 4-8 year olds, reading my bilingual book "Anya and a Thousand Fish" and...
June Antson
Oct 61 min read
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Welcome to My Blog
I’m June Antson, a children’s author and language tutor on a mission to make bilingual stories part of everyday life for families...
June Antson
Sep 281 min read
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